Broadus v. Rosson

3 Va. 12
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Va. 12 (Broadus v. Rosson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broadus v. Rosson, 3 Va. 12 (Va. 1831).

Opinion

Txjckeb, P.

It seems to be agreed on all hands, that there are errors in the proceedings and decree in this cause.

The first that occurs, is the dismissal of the original bill, as to Yates and wife, and decreeing them to pay costs. Whether he was or was not a participator in the fraudulent transaction complained of, his wife, and he of course, were necessary parties, either as plaintiffs or defendants, in this suit for the proceeds of the sale of the land, which were to [24]*24be divided among them all; and he being a proper party with his wife, they might well be joined as plaintiffs, for conformity. The dismissal as to them was therefore erroneous, and the more so, as the defendants were decreed their costs against them, before the cause was finally heard. Out of this error grew another. Yates having been, by the amended bill, made a party defendant, solely upon the supposition that he was liable for the fraud, his wife was not made a party, and was not a party at the hearing. These errors, however, are rendered unimportant by the subsequent proceedings in the cause.

The errors in the final decree, are much more vital. All the parties complain of it. The plaintiffs complain, that Thompson and Norris’s store accounts against them were allowed, and thus their recovery against the sureties of their guardian, was improperly reduced; and that the chancellor improperly required them to execute deeds of release of the land to the purchaser; which last objection, indeed, seems very obvious. The sureties of the guardian complain, that they are improperly charged, because the money claimed was not due to their principal Gaines as guardian, but as the representative of his testator, and he was responsible as administrator to the legatees, not as guardian to his wards; that, supposing them chargeable, they ought not to have been charged in the first instance; and that only their own costs are decreed to them against Thompson and others,, without including the costs decreed to the plaintiffs against them. Thompson, Norris, Broadus and Yates, each and all, insist that there ought to have been no decree against them; and complain yet more, that they are made jointly responsible for the whole of the sums decreed. Let us consider these objections, succinctly, in their order.

As to the plaintiffs’ objection to the allowance of the store accounts. This rests upon two grounds; that there is no sufficient proof of the advance of the goods; and that, if there was, they were improperly paid for out of the principal of the infants’ estate. The first of these grounds [25]*25is not tenable. As it respects Thompson and Norris’s deinands, the bona fide settlement and acknowledgement of the guardian, are, I think, conclusive. He and his sureties, indeed, are bound to shew, that those advances were necessary, and that they were really made; but the merchant is not bound to shew that they were necessary, since it is the province of the guardian to judge of that; nor can he be called upon for further proof of the delivery and price, than the acknowledgement of the guardian with whom he dealt. The other question is more difficult. If the guardian runs up an account for his ward, and pays it out of the principal of his estate, the merchant cannot be bound to refund if he was ignorant of the fact. But, where he is aware that he is receiving payment out of a fund which the law will not permit to be encroached on without an order of the court, I think he stands on no more advantageous ground than the guardian himself. In this case, both Norris and Thompson knew, before they received this money, that it was a part of the wards’ principal estate. As such, according to Myers v. Wade, it could not properly be applied to their current expenses, without the authority of the proper tribunal; and it is, therefore, as necessary in reference to them, as it would be in relation to Gaines, to institute an inquiry, if it be insisted on, as to the propriety of the charge upon this portion of those funds.

We come now to consider the objections of the sureties to the decree. They insist, that they ought not to be charged at all, because their principal was not chargeable as guardian, but as administrator to the legatees. But, in selling the land, he did not act as administrator, properly speaking; he acted as trustee. In taking the bonds as guardian, he charged himself with the fund as guardian; and in this he did right. But the sureties complain, that, at any rate, they should not be first charged. And this complaint I think well founded. If, as I suppose, Thompson and Norris are responsible and bound to refund, they ought to have been first charged. It is natural justice, not only to put the bur[26]*26den on the right person, but to place it there in the first instance; since, otherwise, the most innocent party will bear the brunt of the suit. The only injury the plaintiffs can sustain by this compliance with the terms of the tribunal aid he invokes, is a short delay which is more than comPensated hy his proceeding here against all the parties together, instead of in detail. The claim of the sureties to jlave tjj0 costs which are decreed to the plaintiffs against them, reimbursed to them by the parties ultimately responsible, is deemed well founded.

The other parties, over against whom the decree is rendered in favour of the sureties, are most loud in their complaints. They complain, and very justly, that they are all banded together, and the whole made responsible on the ground of fraud and conspiracy, not only for what they have received, but for what they have not received. Yates, for instance, has received nothing over and above his wife’s just portion of the money; yet because he is supposed to have connived at the fraud, he is made responsible for the whole amount, although he has neither participated in the spoils, nor been the means of enabling others to acquire them. He was only engaged, I think, and that very naturally, in securing his wife’s portion of the proceeds of sale which he had a right to receive. He was therefore improperly made a party with the view to charge him with this responsibility, but as he was a necessary party on other grounds (for a settlement of his accounts as guardian is demanded) the question of his costs must await the final decree as to that matter. Neither were Yates or JYalle, Gaines’s sureties in the counter administration bond, necessary or proper parties in that character, since the sureties of the administrator were not liable for the proceeds of sale of the land. For the like reason, and because there was no foundation for proceeding against him, Wm. Broadus the younger was an improper party. And as to James Yates the surety in the guardian’s bond of Boswell Yates, it is difficult to conceive on what ground he was made a party. As to all these the bill should have been dismissed.

[27]*27With respect to JYorris and Thompson the case is very-different. Thompson’s case seems to me beyond all doubt. He procured the payment out of the funds of Gaines’s wards, of debts which were not due from them, or fairly chargeable on them. He procured this payment from a guardian notoriously failing, if not intirely insolvent, with a full knowledge of the misapplication of the funds, to the prejudice of bis wards or of his sureties.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Va. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broadus-v-rosson-va-1831.